279 55 13MB
English Pages 120 [124] Year 2012
ANDREW
WHITMARSH
DAY
IN PHOTOGRAPHS ANDREW WHITMARSH
The
P
Histo] Press
Three key Allied commanders for D-Day: (left to right) Allied Naval Commander, Admiral Sir Bertram Ramsay; Supreme Allied Commander, General Dwight Eisenhower; Allied Ground Forces Commander, General Sir Bernard Montgomery. They are on board the minelayer HMS Apollo, just off the coast of Normandy on 7 June 1944.
Front cover: A British Royal Navy landing craft carries US Rangers to their
First published 2009 This edition published 2012 The History Press The Mill, Brimscombe Port Stroud, Gloucestershire, GL5 www.thehistorypress.co.uk
ship at Weymouth before D-Day. (Conseil Regional de Basse-Normandie/US National Archives) 2QG
© Portsmouth City Council, 2009 The right of Portsmouth City Council to be identified as the Author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyrights, Designs and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without the permission in writing from the Publishers. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data. A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. isbn 978 o 7524 7479 3
Typesetting and origination by The History Press Manufacturing managed by Jellyfish Print Solutions Ltd Printed in India.
Back cover: Landing craft and ships unload their cargoes at Omaha Beach after D-Day. (Conseil Regional de Basse-Normandie/US National Archives)
CONTENTS FOREWORD BY VISCOUNT MONTGOMERY OF ALAMEIN INTRODUCTION
4 5
one
‘WE SHALL GO BACK’: Preparations for D-Day
7
tWO
‘EMBARKING ON THE GREAT CRUSADE’: D-Day is Launched
27
D-DAY IN STITCHES: The Overlord Embroidery
45
three fOUr
‘WE’RE GOING TO START THE WAR FROM RIGHT HERE’: The American Landings
five
‘DO NOT BE DAUNTED IF CHAOS REIGNS’: The British Landings
SiX
67
‘YOU DON’T JUST WALK TO BERLIN...’: The Normandy Campaign
seven
49
89
from the battle of normandy to ve-day
103
ABOUT THE PHOTOGRAPHS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY
120 120 120
FOREWORD By Viscount Montgomery of Alamein CMG CBE
Following the evacuation from Dunkirk in 1940 and the defeat of France, Britain found herself on her own for the Blitz and the Battle of Britain. With the entry of the Soviet Union in June 1941, followed by the United States that December, the tide slowly started to turn. However, it became clear that the war could only end with the return of Allied forces to N.W. Europe. At the end of 1943 General Eisenhower was appointed Supreme Allied Commander, with my father as Ground Forces Commander. Apart from the British, the Allied Force was principally from the USA and Canada, with smaller contingents from a number of other countries. The whole of the south of England was a restricted area with many military camps, and every harbour bursting with naval ships and landing craft. The invasion of the north coast of France took place on 6 June 1944, initiating the final stage of the Second World War. It was the largest single military operation in the history of warfare, representing a massive effort in planning, co-ordination, leadership, courage and dedication to duty. The ensuing Battle of Normandy was concluded at the end of August but, due to supply problems, the war continued into 1945 and was finally brought to a conclusion in early May 1945 with the surrender of the German Forces at Luneburg Heath. Andrew Whitmarsh, whose earlier book tells the story of Portsmouth at War, has now gone further by producing D-Day in Photographs. Drawn from material in the D-Day Museum where he is the Curator and Military History Officer, it gives a vivid account of how the campaign developed from the planning stage to D-Day itself, the Battle of Normandy and the end of the war in Europe. We study war not to glorify it. Quite the contrary; we study war as an illustration of folly, so that lessons may be learnt and the terrible toll on human life and material destruction can be avoided in the future. Unfortunately it would appear that we still have much to learn. This book may help in that process. Montgomery of Alamein London March 2009
4
INTRODUCTION
‘D-Day’ is a phrase of military origins that has entered into everyday language as meaning a moment of decisive action. Formerly a generic term for the day on which a military operation starts, in the context of warfare, the expression now refers in particular to 6 June 1944, the first day of the Normandy Landings. D-Day truly was a turning point in world history. It began the final stage of the destruction of the Nazi regime in Germany, the liberation of occupied Europe and the end of the Second World War. Many books have been written about D-Day. This volume takes a fresh look at this period in our history, illustrated with photographs, maps, documents, drawings and other material from the extensive archives of the D-Day Museum at Portsmouth, much of which is previously unpublished. The D-Day Museum is the UK’s only museum with the sole aim of telling the story of the Normandy Landings, and is also the home of the unique Overlord Embroidery (examined in detail later). Although the overall story of D-Day is widely known, there are still aspects that have not yet been fully explored by historians. This book aims to put D-Day in context, but the limitations of space do not permit the mention of every unit that took part in the fighting in Normandy, or indeed every stage of the battle. Some of the images in this book were produced for official purposes, while other people carried their own personal camera (or sketchbook) in their infantryman’s rucksack, tank turret or landing craft bridge. The author would like to thank the photographers and artists who produced the illustrations used here, often in difficult and dangerous conditions, which enable us to gain greater understanding of this period. This book is respectfully dedicated to the veterans of D-Day and the Battle of Normandy. Andrew Whitmarsh www.ddaymuseum.co.uk
5
1
(ir. , i
j
fji
/
one ‘WE SHALL GO BACK’: PREPARATIONS FOR D-DAY
D-Day — the Normandy Landings on 6 June 1944 — was a turning point in
was at an end. 338,000 British, French and other troops were evacuated to
the Second World War. However the day itself, and the subsequent Battle of
the UK from Dunkirk and other ports. Soon after, Churchill promised in
Normandy, can only be understood in the context of wider events, starting
Parliament that ‘We shall go back’, but it would be four years before this
with the aftermath of the previous global conflict.
promise was carried out in the form of D-Day.
After its defeat in the First World War of 1914-18, Germany experienced
From this point onwards there was little doubt that Britain could only win
a turbulent period of internal disturbances and ineffectual politics, financial
the war by launching an invasion of German-occupied continental Europe.
impositions in the form of war reparations, hyper-inflation and unemployment.
But in late 1940 the British had no Allies except the Commonwealth and
The rise to power of Adolf Hitler’s Nazi party ended in 1933 with Hitler
were in no position to do so. A series of military campaigns took place over
becoming Chancellor. After re-arming Germany (which after the First World
the next four years, in each of which anything other than an Allied victory
War had been restricted to an army of 100,000 men), Hitler used propaganda,
could have put D-Day in doubt. The immediate threat was of a German
deceit and the threat of military force to bring Austria and Czechoslovakia
invasion of the UK. The Battle of Britain, lasting from June to September
into the new German state. The German invasion of Poland on 1 September
1940, saw the Royal Air Force (RAF) prevent the Luftwaffe (German air
1939 led to France and Britain declaring war on Germany two days later,
force) from establishing the conditions for a seaborne invasion (namely, air
although neither could save Poland from occupation by Germany and the
superiority). The Luftwaffe turned instead to launch the bombing raids of
Soviet Union.
the Blitz on British cities. The middle of 1940 also saw the beginning of the main phase of the
In France, British troops waited alongside their French allies for a German attack. The following months of inactivity were known as the Phoney War.
Battle of the Atlantic. The Germans sought to prevent the movement of
The lull ended in April 1940 with the Blitzkrieg, named from the German
supplies to the UK by sea, particularly from the USA which at this point
for ‘lightning war’, reflecting the speed of the German attacks. Denmark and
had not yet entered the war. The main threat to shipping came from U-
Norway fell to the Nazis. In the UK. the discredited administration of Neville
boats (German submarines). By 1944 the Allies had won the battle, which
Chamberlain was replaced on 10 May 1940 by a coalition government led by
was a pre-condition to launching D-Day. The huge quantities of American
Winston Churchill. That same day saw the beginning of the German invasion
men and munitions required for the landings had to be brought safely across
of France, Belgium and the Netherlands. By 3 June the fighting in France
from the USA (an American armoured division required forty ships to carry it across the Atlantic, for example). Had the situation not been resolved by 1944, continued U-boat attacks would have worsened the already severe
American soldiers bound for Utah Beach in Normandy after D-Day. They
delays that did occur in supplying Allied troops during the subsequent Battle
include soldiers of 4th Infantry Division. For all the Allies’ massive quantities of
of Normandy.
equipment, ultimately it was infantrymen like these who had to go forward and
Several key events took place in 1941. On 22 June Germany invaded her
occupy enemy territory, as they have done since mankind’s first conflicts.
former ally, the Soviet Union, seeking her vast lands and natural resources.
7
D-DAY:
I N
PHOTOGRAPHS
lAir
X,e Cou
No. 4 1942
deux VICTOIRES
M. Churchill dans lequel il est rentre
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leur indignant de ■• troupes ont pn> “ ^ declare d'autre Cette «lolr?i‘iJ J communique, a part un supplement a10nemandes contraint au reeu de homnnes^ei nombreuses d eny'ron, ftcur dc 1 »«** considers comme_ la Mojaisk se nazie. Les survivals u d.encerClc; trouvent mamtenant en situee it mem pres de verey^ Moja;5k. 21 kilometres au supoussent vqrs Plus au sud, les R***MJJ k chemm Yelnia el Smolensk ensu Pendant dc far de Kalouga ,e nord du ce temps, les oper.il Dar(icuHeremenl dans secteur de Mos«>o. pa son, nuUement la rtgion de Rzev, ralenties. ^ Qu| convergeront Entre eradeux ou Smolensk peul-etre btcntot su v> depassent largeles penetrations russes p communt-
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A British propaganda leaflet dropped on occupied France. The main article refers to the AngloAmerican discussions at the first Washington Conference, December 1941-January 1942. The photograph shows Churchill at the controls of the flying boat in which he crossed the Atlantic after his ‘historic mission’ (in the words of the leaflet).
8
PREPARATIONS
FOR
D-DAY
On 7 December Japan entered the war with an attack on the US fleet at
1940 campaigns, Britain and the US began creating airborne forces in 1940-
Pearl Harbour, Hawaii. Germany immediately declared war on the USA as
41 which in time would include the British 6th Airborne and US 82nd and
well. Hitler’s regime now faced the Soviet Union and the USA, the world’s
101st Airborne Divisions, all of which would play key roles on D-Day. The
greatest land power and industrial power respectively.
British Commandos and the US Rangers were set up as elite raiding and
The United Kingdom, the USA and the Soviet Union were now Allies.
assault troops.
Each had their military strengths and weaknesses, and also their own
Specialist landing craft and ships would be required for a major
particular opinions on how the war should be brought to a conclusion. Soviet
amphibious operation. Many of the landing craft and landing ships used on
leader Joseph Stalin was naturally keen for the British and Americans to
D-Day originated with British innovations from before the war, or from
attack German-occupied Western Europe at the first opportunity, to relieve
the early war years. An example was the British ‘Landing Craft, Assault’
the pressure on his troops to the east. The scale of the fighting on the Eastern
(LCA), designed to carry thirty-five troops. The American equivalent was
Front between Germany and the Soviet Union is sometimes overlooked. At
the ‘Landing Craft, Vehicle and Personnel’ (LCVP), which was nicknamed
the end of June 1944 the Soviet Union launched Operation Bagration, a
the Higgins Boat after its New Orleans designer, Andrew Higgins. One of the
major offensive with 1.7 million soldiers, over ten times the number of Allied
most important vessels was the ‘Landing Ship,Tank’ (LST), which could land twenty Sherman tanks directly onto a beach. American industrial capacity
troops who landed on D-Day.
was vital in developing and producing sufficient quantities of landing craft
In December 1941, at the Arcadia conference in Washington, the USA and Britain agreed on the principle of‘Germany First’. In other words, the main
and ships for D-Day.
Anglo-American war effort would be directed against Germany in Europe
In October 1941 the UK’s Combined Operations Command received
rather than Japan in the Pacific. The war against Japan was still a thorny issue
a new commander, Lord Louis Mountbatten. Under his control, the
between the two Allies. Some American leaders argued that America’s main
Command turned from launching minor raids to preparing for the invasion
interests were in the Pacific, and that the fighting in Europe should take
of the whole of German-occupied Europe. Mountbatten’s command also
second place. The two theatres of war were in competition for many of the
saw the development of two great engineering feats, the Mulberry Harbours
same resources, such as the landing craft and ships needed both for D-Day
(artificial harbours) and PLUTO (Pipe Line Under The Ocean), which will
and in the Pacific.
be described later.
The US urged for a landing in Europe as soon as possible, preferably
On 19 August 1942 Combined Operations launched what has become
before the end of 1942. In the UK there was also public pressure, with the
known as the Dieppe Raid.This was a major attack by around 5,000 Canadian
favoured slogan of‘Second Front Now!’With several years experience of
and 1,000 British troops on the French port of Dieppe. The Allied force
fighting the Germans, the British government and armed forces took a more
suffered heavy losses and in many places was pinned down by German fire.
measured approach. They believed that more time was required to assemble
The survivors were withdrawn by sea later that day. The operation has often
and train the Allied forces required for such a huge operation.The Americans
been credited with teaching the Allies useful lessons for D-Day, although
were persuaded to join British and Commonwealth troops fighting in the
many of these lessons were already known. The raid did demonstrate that
Mediterranean theatre. In October 1942 the British Eighth Army, led by
the Germans were likely to defend ports so well that the Allies could not
Lieutenant General (later Field Marshal Sir) Bernard Montgomery, defeated
depend on capturing them quickly. It also indicated the need for two factors
Field Marshal Erwin Rommel’s German forces at El Alamein in Egypt, and
that were missing from the Dieppe campaign: the element of surprise, and
the following month saw Anglo-American landings in Morocco and Algeria.
bombardment by aircraft and warships before the troops landed. When they landed on D-Day the first waves of infantry would be terribly
With the expulsion of German forces from North Africa, an attack from the
exposed. A single enemy machine gun or bunker could block the advance
south against Germany and her ally Italy became possible. Meanwhile, preparations for the Anglo-American landings in Europe were
of a much larger number of soldiers. Consequently a variety of specialised
underway, even if a date had not yet been set. Specialist units, equipment
British armoured vehicles were designed for D-Day. Known as the ‘Funnies’,
and tactics were developed which would play vital parts in the landings.
they were incorporated into the 79th Armoured Division. Some were
Following the successful German use of glider and parachute troops in the
equipped to deal with enemy defences such as pillboxes or minefields, while
9
D-DAY:
SOVIET
WAS
No- 31
«EWS
WEEKLY—TtiUfidty,
?®1h
August.
! N
PHOTOGRAPHS
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AUGUST 20 1942 THREEPENCE
forward from the
MOSCOW TALKS! I
—* by a * Special Correspondent
J
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1IE Moscow negotiations have taken place at a moment of great Ihstori-
the Wor,d
8
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• Hugging (he wall of Southern Front advance on frJm thC advanc*ng Sovie?forces Th POint/ Thc vi,Ia Sovtaforc« biTb”fTl-''S from Moscow, was takena in fr PJctur.c’ wired to in the the flash “«»n nasn iro from a burstingw,rcd shell. 1
17
0 R
French members of No. 10 (Inter-Allied) Commando, a unit formed from men
Women assembling Sten sub-machine guns in a British factory. Munitions
who had escaped from countries occupied by the Germans. On D-Day 177
production, and the British war effort in general, relied heavily on women, often
Frenchmen from this Commando landed on Sword Beach, under the command
performing tasks that before the war were considered the domain of men.
of Captain Philippe Kieffer. (© Trustees of the Royal Marines Museum)
18
PREPARATIONS
1 A Landing Craft, Tank (LCT) being unloaded from the Landing Ship, Tank
2
FOR
D-DAY
Low-level aerial photographs of the coast of northern France were prepared
(LST) that carried it across the Atlantic from the USA, where both had been
to aid landing craft crews on D-Day. This shows Ouistreham, on the eastern
made. American manufacturing capabilities played a vital role in the Allied
side of Sword Beach. The water splashes result from the Germans trying to
victory. LCT 332, shown here, was critically damaged by a mine on D-Day.
shoot down the reconnaissance aircraft!
(US Navy photograph) 3
In 1942 10 million holiday photographs and postcards like this one (showing Courseulles, on what would become Juno Beach) were collected through a public appeal across the UK. These innocent pre-war scenes could reveal useful details about the gradient of a beach, the layout of beach exits, and so on.
19
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The ‘Funnies’ - the specialist tanks of British 79th Armoured Division - played a valuable part on D-Day. This flail tank (seen in France after D-Day) has chains on a drum attached to the front of the vehicle that, when spun, strike the ground, harmlessly setting off any mines in its path. (Canadian Military photograph)
20
PREPARAT
O N S
FOR
D
DAY
EISENHOWER EST NOMME CHEF DU SECOND FRONT Nous pouvons enfin envisager I’avenir avec une con fiance reelle, une confiance raisonneedit M. Roosevelt dans son discours de Noel. L’Armee Americaine compte 10 'millions d’hommes. L'Etat-Major du Second Front est disigne. "
L*
Washington, 28 dicembrc.—Au retour dc son voyage qui l'a conduit dans la region m&litcrranccnnc ct jusqu'aux fronttcrcs dc la Rustic, Ic President Roosevelt s’est adressd au pcuplc americain 3 I'occasion dc la Noel. “J’ai confirm avee les dirigeants dc la GrandeBretagne, de la Ruvsic, dc la Chine, sur les probtemes militairev du moment Nos entretiens ont port£ particulicrcmcnt sur les raoyens qu'il faut mettre cn ceuvre pour acc£16rer aussi rapidement que possible l'atxaquc victoricusc que nous m$non» contrc nos ennemis, et ccla de plusicurs edtes dc 1'horizon glographtquc. En cettc vcille de No£l, il y a plus dc dix millions d’hommes dans les seules forces armies des Etats-Unis. . Trots millions huit cents millc soldats am&icaim servent au-dcla des mere,"
Puts le President Roosevelt parlc dev combats qui ont de)a cu lieu au cours dc cettc guerre ct des " bntiullcs bcaucoup plus grandev bcaucoup^ plus cod cuscs en perspective." Mats, dU-il, "nous pouvons enfin envisager I'avenir avec confiance reelle. une confiance raisonnee. Jc peux vous dire que. jucl qu'en soil le prix, la paix sur terre aux hor.u.vcv de ltonne volonti pourra etre ct sera assuric.” A propos des conlircncrs du Cairo ct dc Teheran, il parlc de la grande confiance qui y rignait ct qui a rendu possible ct ftuctucux I'cxamcn des problimcs les plus divers Pour P Extreme-Orient, ” nous avons mis au point (avec Ic general Chiang Kai-shek), du Ic President Roosevelt, non seulcmcnt uric strategic militaire difi« stammeot P '1C, concentraarriirea, de matfriel-
mardi 6 juin, a 9 ^ vfjZ'Grlt 22BLV*’&*is-r-ss Le
^
from a variety of sources warning that the invasion would take place on a
On the other hand the Allied forecast for 6 June might have been too
specific date or at a specific place, so it was difficult to identify genuine clues
optimistic. In the event the indifferent weather did cause problems for Allied
amongst all the false leads.
troops on D-Day, scattering paratroopers and causing many problems on
After years of planning, reconnaissance and debate, the armies and fleets
the beaches. Higher winds, lower clouds, rougher seas or decreased visibility
had gathered and were waiting for the order to depart. The decision on
could have meant launching the landings with less effective air support, few
whether to launch the invasion fell to the Allied commanders, and ultimately
concentrated airborne forces, and less accurate naval gunfire support.
to Eisenhower as Supreme Allied Commander. In true British fashion so
Finally, Eisenhower might have decided that the weather forecast for
much came to depend on the weather.
6 June was too uncertain, and have decided on a further delay, as the air
In the days leading up to D-Day, the commanders met at Southwick
commanders suggested. The next period when the conditions might be
House, a stately home a few miles north of Portsmouth. Since 26 April 1944
suitable was 18-20 June. In the event, on 19-21 June there was a major storm
the house had been the headquarters of Admiral Ramsay, the Allied Naval
which caused considerable losses to Allied naval forces, and which would
Commander for D-Day. Closer to the date of the landings Eisenhower and
surely have prevented the initial landings from taking place. Had the landings
Montgomery (and their respective staffs) moved to nearby sites.
been delayed until July, the Germans might have discovered that the Allies intended to land in Normandy, and in any case would have had another
On the morning of 3 June, two days before the intended date for
month to strengthen the defences there and reinforce the garrison.
the landings, the commanders were briefed by the chief Allied weather forecaster, Group Captain James Stagg. The forecast was for unsuitable
In fact the Allies thought it likely that the Germans would have from
conditions, with low cloud, strong winds and rough seas, and D-Day was
twelve to twenty-four hours warning of the impending invasion. Even this
provisionally postponed; the postponement was confirmed in the early
small degree of warning could have given the Germans time to start moving
hours of 4 June. Those naval forces that had the furthest distances to travel
tank reserves forward towards the beaches, and to position night fighter
were already at sea. Orders were sent out to recall them, but one convoy of
aircraft to attack the transport planes carrying the Allied airborne troops.The
over 100 vessels bound for Utah Beach was not recalled until around thirty
size of the Allied forces and the length of time they would take to cross the
miles south of the Isle of Wight, risking the loss of surprise for the entire
English Channel made detection at the last minute quite possible, even by a
landings.
single reconnaissance aircraft or patrol boat. Allied minesweepers arrived off
A key meeting of the Allied commanders took place at 9 p.m. on 4 June.
Utah and Omaha beaches at 7.40 p.m. on 5 June, and were close enough to
Stagg predicted a thirty-six-hour improvement in the weather. Although
see the French coast. The minesweepers were clearing safe channels along
conditions would not be perfect, the wind and rough seas seemed likely to ease up enough for the operation to work. Only minutes remained before the first ships would have to depart. In the face of doubts from Tedder and Leigh-Mallory (from their perspectives as airmen), Eisenhower took the
Did the secret of D-Day get out?
decision to launch the operation. After this long process of decision-making, when it came to 6 June itself
A briefcase containing a complete set of D-Day plans was left behind
the Allied commanders had very little to do — apart from waiting on news
on a train and was found at Exeter station by a railway worker.
from the beaches.
Another set of secret papers was left in a London taxi, but the driver
Fortunately Eisenhower’s decision proved to be correct. However, there
returned them. A US Army sergeant at Eisenhower's HQ accidentally
are several ways in which events could have taken a different turn. First,
sent secret documents to his sister in the USA (he was tired and
Eisenhower might have ignored the forecast for 5 June (which was after all
wrote the wrong address on the packet). In all these cases, the secret
a prediction, not a certainty) and decided that D-Day had to be launched
of D-Day was preserved.
whatever the weather.This was what Montgomery recommended; no doubt keen to get to grips with the enemy and mindful of the increased chance of discovery by the enemy as each day went by.
33
which the remainder of the Allied shipping could proceed. Due to the size of
jamming the remainder. The weather also helped. On the morning of 5 June
the area to be cleared they had no choice but to begin their work so early. An
the chief German meteorologist predicted winds of Force 6-7 (25-38mph)
hour later some were close enough to make out buildings on the shore.
off the coasts of Normandy and the Pas de Calais. The Germans believed
This was another opportunity for the Germans to gain a last minute
that if the wind strength was Force 4 or over, the sea would be too rough
warning of the landings. Observers on the coast did report activity out at sea,
for amphibious landings. They also predicted low cloud, which would have
and a small group of E-boats (fast attack boats) were ordered out to sea from
ruled out aerial or airborne operations. The weather in the English Channel
Le Havre. At around 5.30 a.m. three E-boats attacked the shipping heading
came mainly from the west, but Allied dominance of the Atlantic meant the
for Sword Beach, sank the Norwegian destroyer Svenner and narrowly missed
Germans did not have ships or aircraft there to collect adequate weather data.
several other ships with their torpedoes.
So much on D-Day depended on a small number of Allied ships and aircraft
The Allies had stacked the odds in their favour against detection by
out in the Atlantic gathering data to enable accurate weather predictions to
destroying seventy-six of the ninety-two German coastal radar stations, and
be made.
Less famous than the nearby Southwick House, the underground headquarters at Fort Southwick played an important role in the co-ordination of D-Day. Seen here is the map on which naval movements in the English Channel were plotted before being relayed to Southwick House and other headquarters.
34
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Map showing some of the camps of Marshalling Area C, around Southampton, that were used by troops waiting for D-Day. By 9 August 1944, 571,000 personnel (mostly British and American) and 109,000 vehicles had loaded at Southampton onto ships bound for Normandy.
2
US soldiers in an M3A1 halftrack wait to embark for D-Day. One is reading a guide to France, specially prepared for the invasion. Due to the numbers involved vehicles were often parked along roadsides while the troops waited. (Conseil Regional de Basse-Normandie / US National Archives)
35
The D-Day crosswords Over four days between 2 May and 1 June 1944 the Daily Telegraph crossword featured the D-Day codewords: ‘Utah’, ‘Omaha’, 'Overlord', ‘Mulberry’ and ‘Neptune’. Allied intelligence feared a security leak, and questioned the man who set the crosswords, school headmaster Leonard Dawe. Various theories have been suggested, but it appears to have been just a bizarre coincidence.
1
British soldiers play cards with firemen (some of whom also went over to Normandy after D-Day) in one of the marshalling area camps. This shows the camps' temporary nature (mainly tents) and how they were well camouflaged and often hidden in woods.
2
So-called ‘bogus’ maps like this one were used to brief troops before D-Day. To preserve secrecy all the details of the maps were correct except for the place names. ‘Venice’ is in fact Benouville, and the bridge across ‘Portugal’ is really the famous Pegasus Bridge over the Caen Canal.
3
A US Navy officer briefs crewmembers of the battleship USS Nevada several days before D-Day. Nevada was allocated to the operation in April when it was felt that more naval firepower would be needed to support the troops ashore. (US Navy photograph)
4
British Army and Royal Marines personnel wait in a Southampton street before embarking for D-Day. On the right is a Universal Carrier belonging to 50th Division which has been fitted with high metal sides to enable it to wade through deep water. Taken by Oliver H. Perks of 90th Field Regiment, Royal Artillery.
36
37
J&*
1
British Army lorries load onto an American Landing Ship, Tank (LST) at Hardway in Gosport, Hampshire. They are reversing onto the ship so that on reaching Normandy they will be able to drive out forwards. Portsmouth Harbour is in the background.
2 Men of the Royal Engineers use a temporary pier on the Southsea seafront to load onto a Landing Craft, Infantry (LCI). This pier was sited alongside South Parade Pier, which in peacetime was frequented by holidaymakers. (Courtesy of The News, Portsmouth)
3 American vehicles and 155mm ‘Long Tom’ guns are loaded onto several LCTs (Landing Craft, Tank) at Weymouth. This photograph illustrates the complexity of the embarkation process. Troops, vehicles and equipment had to be loaded onto the right landing craft, in the right order. (Courtesy of Royal Naval Museum, Portsmouth)
Opposite:
American soldiers (mainly from 1st Infantry Division) bound
for Omaha Beach wait on a landing craft at Weymouth before D-Day. The African-American soldier on the right was probably a member of a barrage balloon or engineer unit. (Conseil Regional de BasseNormandie / US National Archives)
1
US troops embark for D-Day at Weymouth. In the foreground are Rangers in British-manned LCAs (Landing Craft, Assault). The Rangers landed at Pointe du Hoc and Omaha Beach on D-Day. (Conseil Regional de Basse-Normandie / US National Archives)
2 Detail from a chart showing mooring sites in the Solent (between the Isle of Wight and mainland UK). There were hundreds of berths for ships and large landing craft in this area alone. (Courtesy of David Maber) pc I
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3 Ground crew of No.411 Squadron, Royal Canadian Air
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Force, paint 'invasion stripes’ on a Spitfire IXe fighter at RAF Tangmere on 5 June. The stripes were a recognition marking, to prevent Allied aircraft being shot at by their own side as had happened during the 1943 Sicily landings. (Courtesy of Tangmere Aviation Museum)
4 Allied aircraft flew 14,674 missions on D-Day. This wartime map indicates some of their roles. The red arc shows the area lUnintcd ..... pt'rnoim in HI* Majesty* Service bolo*- tlic rank of commissioned’ Officer vrbo mnj' require Ui l»i acquainted^ witlr IU content* iu the conrao of tholr duties. Tile Officer* oxureisinft this power will be held responsible that such Infor-; mation i* imparted with due oration and
within which enemy airfields would be attacked. The dots are railway targets that were to be attacked by Allied bombers, to delay German reinforcements moving to Normandy from elsewhere in France. Other aircraft provided close protection to the main fleets, or operated on either flank of the landings to guard against enemy U-boats (submarines) and warships. The areas of land marked out in grey are those considered most suitable for the development of airfields after the ground troops had advanced.
5 Men of US 82nd Airborne Division check each other’s equipment as they prepare to depart for D-Day from RAF Saltby in Lincolnshire. Their aircraft would take off in the late evening of 5 June, and they landed in Normandy early on 20(E)
D-Day. (Conseil Regional de Basse-Normandie / US National Archives)
20(W)
6 Preparations are made at RAF Tarrant Rushton in Hampshire for the reinforcement of the British 6th Airborne Division. On the runway are mainly Hamilcar heavy lift gliders, with Halifax tug aircraft at the sides. The photograph was taken on the 23s
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The sixth beach The five beaches, from Utah to Sword, are well known. However, there was also a sixth beach that was potentially considered for landing, known as 'Band'. It lay to the east of Sword, on the far side of the Orne River. It was unusable because the Germans had flooded much of the area inland, and in any case the Allies did not have enough forces to land additional troops there also.
1
A Frenchman distributes a welcoming drink to men of 1st Hampshires, in Arromanches on D-Day. The town was captured from inland rather than by an amphibious landing. After D-Day it became the centre of the British Mulberry Harbour. (Collection Musee du Debarquement, Arromanches)
2
HMS Princess Josephine Charlotte, seen here, was a Belgian crossChannel passenger vessel, converted to carry 247 troops and eight landing craft. On D-Day she and SS Victoria landed men of No.47 Royal Marine Commando. Of the fourteen landing craft from these two vessels, only two survived the landings unscathed.
3
A drawing of Port-en-Bessin, from American naval orders for D-Day. This small fishing port, well defended by the Germans, was on the boundary between Omaha and Gold Beaches. It was captured by No.47 Royal Marine Commando on 7 June after a ten-mile march through enemy territory.
78
1
Wartime map of part of Juno Beach, showing extensive beach obstacles at the water’s edge. Troops of 3rd Canadian Division landed here, including Royal Winnipeg Rifles and Regina Rifles at Courseulles-sur-Mer (left), and Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada at Bernieres-sur-Mer (right).
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2 LCA 821 (a Landing Craft, Assault) lands Canadian troops of the North Shore Regiment at La Rive, Juno Beach. This is a still from a cine film that was shown in cinemas as part of a Pathe Gazette newsreel on 15 June, which was one of the first shots of the initial landings to be seen by the British public.
'URSLULLES 1SUR-MER PROS** E LIMIT saturatco oroi ALL SUBJECT TO ELOOOIN®
3 Men of the headquarters of 4th Special Service (Commando) Brigade land at St Aubin-sur-Mer on Juno Beach. The time is around 9 a.m. on D-Day. The man in the foreground features in the Overlord Embroidery, although minus his glasses. Behind him a lightweight motorcycle is being carried ashore. (© Trustees of the Royal Marines Museum)
79
1
After the capture of Nan White Beach (Bernieres-sur-Mer) a medic treats the wounded and Beach Group troops dig foxholes for protection against shelling. The pillbox on the right housed a 50mm anti¬ tank gun and caused many of the sixty-five casualties suffered by the Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada coming ashore here.
2 Canadians of the Regiment de la Chaudiere land from LCAs on Nan sector of Juno Beach at around 9 a.m. on D-Day. Photograph taken by S. Mincher, serving on LCT 1008.
3 German prisoners of war are gathered on the station platform at Bernieres-sur-Mer. Below the sign on the station building is a French boy, Jacques Martin, who had with him a trolley holding salvaged possessions from his family's home which had been destroyed by Allied shelling immediately before the landings.
80
An aerial photograph taken at 3.20 p.m. on D-Day to the west of Courseulles (Mike sector, Juno Beach). Several larger landing craft have been stranded on the beach by the tide. Queues of vehicles wait to advance inland: the two beach exits at this point were blocked for some time by German obstacles.
ASS
Canadian soldiers land from LCTs on Juno Beach on the afternoon of 6 June. They are marching past a pile of ‘hedgehog’ beach obstacles onto a trackway made from wooden stakes. This is one of a relatively small number of colour photographs taken on D-Day. (Conseil Regional de Basse-Normandie / National Archives Canada)
1
The church at Bernieres-sur-Mer was shelled by the Allies to drive out German snipers who were using it as an observation point.
2 The city of Caen after Allied bombing on D-Day, which aimed to disrupt the movement of German reinforcements. Caen was again heavily bombed on 7 July to pave the way for the Anglo-Canadian offensive the following day. In fact the bombing made the city easier for the Germans to defend, and caused many French civilian casualties.
82
An aerial photograph of Pegasus Bridge at Benouville (left) and Horsa Bridge at Ranville (right), across the Caen Canal and River Orne respectively. The two bridges were seized by British 6th Airborne Division as the first military operation of D-Day, to protect the eastern flank of the beach landings. East of the beach landings, and a short distance inland, was the Merville Battery (seen on this wartime map surrounded by two rings of ‘X’s marking barbed wire, just above the letters ‘RIO’). The battery was captured early on D-Day in a heroic attack by 9th Battalion, the Parachute Regiment.
83
Marines of No.48 Commando dig foxholes for protection in the 6th Airborne Division landing area, not far from Pegasus Bridge, on 9 June 1944. They were relieving 12th Battalion, the Parachute Regiment. Horsa gliders that landed on D-Day can be seen behind them. (© Trustees of the Royal Marines Museum)
84
TwoX-craft mini-submarines preceded the main invasion force, waiting off Gold and Sword Beaches for seventy-six hours (of which sixty-four hours were spent submerged). At 5 a.m. on D-Day they surfaced to provide additional navigation points for the Allied fleet. This photograph is signed by George Honour, who commanded one of them - X-23 - at Sword Beach. A wartime map showing part of Sword Beach where the British 3rd Division
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This drawing from the German air force magazine Luftflotte West is
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based on a photograph taken to the east of the Allied landings. It gives an impression of the sight facing the German defenders as the Allied fleet arrived off the beaches. Vehicles of 27th Armoured Brigade on Sword Beach, seen from LCI(S) 519 - a Landing
Craft,
Infantry
(Small) - that was about to land Lord Lovat and men of 1st Special Service (Commando) Brigade HQ. The LCI(S)’s landing ramps can be seen in the foreground. (© Trustees of the Royal Marines Museum)
86
1
LCT 979 (a Landing Craft, Tank) lands troops
on Sword Beach. Many of the troops leaving this craft were killed by machine-gun fire before they reached dry land. The central figures near the water’s edge are four Germans who wanted to surrender, but the LCT’s crew would not take them prisoner. Photograph taken by Lieutenant P.W.D. Winkley RNVR.
2 Queen White sector of Sword Beach, seen mid-morning on D-Day. This section of beach was lined with houses, each of which could potentially act as a strongpoint for German troops. The tide has come right in and many vehicles can be seen on the narrow strip of beach that remains.
How many Allied casualties were there on D-Day? It has always been harder than you might expect to obtain an accurate figure for the total number of Allied casualties (killed, wounded, missing and prisoners of war) on D-Day. In the confusion of the day, many Allied personnel went missing from their units, sometimes temporarily or else because they had been killed in action. The Allied casualty figures for D-Day have generally been estimated at 10,000, including 2,500 dead. However, recent research by the US National D-Day Memorial has built up a list of individual names of Allied personnel who died at Normandy, and this has established that 4,414 men died on D-Day, of which 2,499 were American and 1,915 were from other Allied countries. For more information, see: www.dday.org.
87
1
Inland from Sword were two major strongpoints: Morris (top left) and Hillman (middle left). Morris surrendered rapidly, but Hillman required a methodical attack that delayed a significant part of 3rd Division for five hours. The tiny dots in the fields are anti-glider poles. The village at the top is Colleville.
2 Sword Beach two days after D-Day. The smoke cloud was probably from an oil dump near the beach, set on fire by a German fighter-bomber. The small beachhead was so crowded that a bomb dropped almost anywhere within it was likely to damage some part of the Allied forces.
‘YOU DON’T JUST WALK TO BERLIN...’: THE NORMANDY CAMPAIGN The long-awaited news of D-Day was solemnly received in Allied countries,
and then were towed across the English Channel and assembled in position
with an awareness that there would be a period of bitter fighting before the
off the coast of Normandy after D-Day. Two were created: Mulberry A in
war might be brought to an end. On the morning of D-Day, British radio
the American sector at St Laurent, and Mulberry B under British control at
carried announcements from General Eisenhower and leaders of occupied
Arromanches.They consisted of outer breakwaters, which sheltered floating
countries, including the Free French leader, General Charles de Gaulle. In
piers and roadways onto which ships could unload their cargoes.
other Allied states national leaders also spoke on the radio, warning of the
On 19-22 June a storm hit the Channel which caused problems for the
hard fight to come but also of their confidence in the eventual Allied victory.
Allied forces. Some 800 craft were thrown up on the beaches, and Mulberry
In the USA, President Franklin Roosevelt warned against hopes for a quick
A was damaged beyond repair before it had been put into full operation.The
victory, saying: ‘You don’t just walk to Berlin, and the sooner this country
number of troops being landed-stood at 80 per cent of the planned figure,
realises that, the better.’
and only 61 per cent of the required supplies were yet ashore. The shortfalls
The fighting from D-Day to the end of August 1944 is known as the
in supplies meant that desperate measures had to be taken. Holes were cut
Battle of Normandy. Allied success would depend on many factors, but one
in the sides of certain ships carrying ammunition, to speed up unloading:
can pick two in particular. First were the skill, determination and bravery of
damaging the ship was less important than continuing the ammunition
the troops, particularly those who regularly came into direct contact with
supply. There is no doubt that the Mulberry Harbours were an impressive
the enemy. The other key factor was logistics — in other words, supplying the armies. These two parts of an army are often known as the ‘teeth’ and ‘tail’
engineering feat. However, some historians now question whether they
respectively, and each would have had little effect without the other.
justified the huge resources used in their construction: 30,000 tons of steel and concrete, and a workforce 45,000 strong. In ten months of operation, 2.5
In the six days after D-Day the Allies brought ashore 326,547 men, 54,186 vehicles and 104,428 tons of supplies. Everything that the Allied armies in
million men, 500,000 vehicles and 4 million tons of supplies landed at the
Normandy required, from food to ammunition to fuel, had to be landed over
Arromanches Mulberry. Fortunately for the Allies it also proved possible to
the beaches. Consequently the naval forces continued to play a vital role after
land cargoes directly onto the beaches at a faster rate than predicted. Another great engineering achievement associated with D-Day was
D-Day itself, and the Germans tried to sink supply ships or at least delay the rate at which reinforcements were landed. They laid pressure mines just
PLUTO, which stood for Pipeline Under the Ocean, and was a method of
off the Normandy coast, a type not used before. These were activated by a
moving fuel over to the Continent. Specially developed 3-inch-diameter
ship’s wake, and forced all ships in the coastal area to travel at reduced speed.
pipes would be laid across the Channel, and connected to the overland fuel
Midget submarines were also used to attack shipping off the coast.
pipeline systems on either side of the sea. It had been intended that the first
The Allies had developed a sophisticated method of increasing the rate at
PLUTO pipeline would be laid eighteen days after D-Day, from the Isle of
which supplies could be landed in Normandy: the Mulberry Harbours.These
Wight (just off the south coast of England) to the port of Cherbourg in
were prefabricated, artificial harbours that were built in sections in the UK,
Normandy. Delays in the capture of Cherbourg, and technical problems with
89
the pipeline, meant that PLUTO did not operate until 22 September. Just over a month later a new route was opened from Dungeness in Kent across to Boulogne. For a while PLUTO pumped 1 million gallons per day (equivalent to 250,000 jerry cans). Due partly to the delays, however, only 10 per cent of the fuel used from D-Day onwards went via PLUTO. The fighting in Normandy was shaped by the terrain. Across much of the battlefield — on both the American and the Anglo-Canadian fronts - there were many small fields bordered by thick hedgerows, and small villages with sunken lanes leading between them, creating a landscape known as the bocage. It was difficult to co-ordinate the movement of troops, who were vulnerable to ambushes. New tactics and equipment had to be created to deal with these conditions, such as metal ‘teeth’ that were added to the front of some American tanks to enable them to burst through the earth banks. Around twenty miles south of the Anglo-Canadian sector was the socalled Suisse Normande (‘Norman’ Switzerland), with many wooded hills and ridges. To the south and south-east of Caen the countryside was much more open, and both sides used (or hoped to use) their tanks here en masse. Some historians have suggested that the Allies’ preparations and training focussed on the beach landings and did not consider the tactics that would be needed in the bocage.They concentrated on D-Day itself- the first problem that they had to face, and one that was reasonably well understood — rather than circumstances that might or might not occur afterwards. Allied planners optimistically hoped that there would be a quick advance through the more difficult terrain behind the beaches, and into the more open countryside beyond. The close-in terrain certainly aided the Germans, who were on the defensive for most of the fighting. The frontline of a German position was normally held by few men (supported by many machine guns and mortars), with the majority of their troops positioned further back. As Allied soldiers advanced, they would often come under fire from behind from scattered German troops who had hidden as they went past, or would be counter-attacked by German reserve forces. Tanks and infantry frequently became separated in the advance
The June 1944 issue of De Frie Danske (The Free Dane), an underground newspaper secretly produced in German-occupied Denmark. The cover shows an American and a British soldier, marking the beginning of the liberation of Europe. D-Day gave hope to countries occupied by the Germans that freedom would eventually come.
and could not support each other. Infantry were vulnerable to enemy tanks, unless thick vegetation meant that they could creep up close to them. Tanks
52
30 Days
JUNE 1944
were a powerful weapon but were vulnerable to being ambushed by carefully camouflaged tanks or anti-tank guns, against which they needed assistance from the infantry. Aircraft and artillery were both often called upon to pave
MONDAY
(157-209)
the way for an attack or when Allied troops met heavy resistance. The Allies
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had enough aircraft that at any moment in daytime (weather permitting)
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of ground troops whenever they were called for. Artillery and mortars (firing at longer and shorter ranges respectively)
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were vital in supporting other troops. Allied attacks often followed behind an artillery barrage — a line of bursting shells that would slowly advance through
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the enemy positions. Yet, while the artillery might enable Allied troops to
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advance, it would fall to the infantry to hold the newly gained position and
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defend it against counter-attack. Enemy artillery was also a frequent cause
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Ein
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A British burial party near Courseulles after D-Day.
“Die V-Waffen spielen in diesem Krieg eine ahnliche Rolle wie der Tank
The photographer was a naval chaplain, Canon F.W.
im letzten. Sie kommen fiir diesen Krieg zu spat und bediirfen noch jahreianger
(Mike) Crooks. Troops were often buried near where
Weiterentwicklung, um sich von einer psychologischen Waffe in ein wahres
they fell. After the war most scattered graves were
Kampfmittel zu verwandeln.
concentrated together into the larger war cemeteries
Sollte in 2S Jahren ein neuer Krieg stattfinden,
und wenn es gelSnge, ungestort die Vorbereitungen zu treffen, die von der
of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission and
deutschen Ftihrung ursprungtieh beabsichtigt waren, dann konnen diese Waffen
American Battle Monuments Commission that we
Im nachsten Krieg wohl ein Faktor ersten Ranges werden.”
know today. Verungliiektes V-l-Ceschoss. Ungefdhr 25 v. H. der Projektlie wichen von Ihrer Bahn ab Oder stOrzten Im unmittelbaren Abschussraum ab. Insgesamt 46 v. H. warden durch Jdger und Flakbatterien abgetchossen.
2
Another photograph taken on board LST 425, this one showing German prisoners of war from Normandy being brought back to the UK. In the heat of battle shootings of prisoners sometimes occurred on both sides, particularly in the bitter rivalry that developed between the Canadians and SS troops. (Courtesy of Martin Wilson)
3
On 13 June 1944 the Germans began to fire V-1 flying bombs (doodlebugs) at the UK. This image is taken from an Allied propaganda leaflet which suggests that V-ls were ineffective. German propaganda leaflets taunted British soldiers with the damage the flying bombs were causing back home in the UK.
102
seven FROM THE BATTLE OF NORMANDY TO VE-DAY
After D-Day the Allies sought to expand their beachhead, and the Germans
The Allies’ immediate task after D-Day was to join the five beaches
tried to contain it while they brought reinforcements to the scene. The story of the Normandy landings has often tended to focus on 6 June itself, rather
together, as well as pressing further inland. The Americans had to capture the town of Carentan, which would link together Utah and Omaha. Despite
than the following days. It was the week or so after D-Day that was the
considerable German reinforcements, Carentan was in American hands on
critical period when the landings could perhaps have been defeated.
12 June. Meanwhile, forces from Omaha were pushing south towards St Lo,
In the space available it is unfortunately not possible to mention every unit or operation that played a part in the fighting after D-Day, but this
another key road junction, but progress through the bocage countryside was slow.
chapter will outline some key events. Allied strategy in Normandy has
South of Gold Beach the British spotted a gap opening up between the
become a controversial subject. In its end result, the Battle of Normandy
retreating German forces of 352nd Division and the Panzer Lehr Division to
went according to the plan set out by General Montgomery beforehand. The Anglo-Canadians would push forward on the eastern side of the Allied
the east which, if exploited, might lead to the capture of Caen. On 13 June the advance of 7th Armoured Division into this gap at Villers-Bocage was
landings, drawing the German reserves (especially the tanks of the panzer divisions) onto that flank, until the enemy forces facing the Americans were
forces, forcing 7th Armoured to retreat.
sufficiently weakened to make a break-out possible; then the whole Allied army would advance on a broad front and push the Germans back.
of Utah Beach, at the top of the Cotentin Peninsula. On 17 June US forces
halted by a small group of heavy Tiger tanks, and other advancing German Another major American target was the port of Cherbourg, to the north
The battle ended with the Allies reaching the River Seine in roughly the
reached the western side of the peninsula, sealing off the defenders of Cherbourg further north. Gradually the Allied forces were forming a more
timescale envisaged - ninety days — but the details of the campaign had not followed the plan exactly. The variations between the plan and the actual battle are one of the main causes of controversy. For example, before D-Day
coherent beachhead, but the advance to the south faced strong German resistance. By now 557,000 Allied troops had been landed in Normandy. The
the capture of Caen was envisaged for the first day of the landings, but this was
Allied forces were slightly stronger than those of the Germans, but given that
not achieved. In the event, the city became a pivot around which many of the Anglo-Canadian battles were fought. Montgomery’s strategy was sometimes
the terrain suited the defenders they were not sufficiently superior to launch a decisive attack.
misunderstood, and a major breakthrough was expected when his intention
Many German infantry units — which would normally have formed the
was simply to stop German tanks from moving towards the Americans.
first line of defence — had suffered casualties to such an extent that tank units had to be employed to fill gaps in the frontline. This meant that the tanks
Soon after D-Day the Allies were warned of an impending attack through Ultra intelligence. Ultra also identified the location of the headquarters of Panzer Group West, which was to command the counter-offensive. A rapid
could not be gathered into a reserve that could be launched in a powerful
air attack on this HQ by forty rocket-firing Typhoons and seventy-one
counter-attack. Although the use of tanks in this way often halted Allied attacks in the short term, in the longer term it was playing into the Allies’
medium bombers on 11 June cut it short.
hands. Constant combat, and Allied naval gunfire and aircraft attacks, was 103
D-DA
IN
PHOTOGRAPHS
facing the Americans, had one mechanised, one panzer, three infantry, one
Revealing the secret of D-Day
airlanding and one parachute division.
Even after D-Day, the Allied agent 'Garbo’ played a vital part in convincing the
The superiority of certain German weapons over their Allied equivalents
Germans that the main Allied landing would take place in northern France. To
is frequently mentioned in accounts of the Battle of Normandy. The Tiger I
boost his credibility it was decided that Garbo should warn the Germans of D-Day
and Panther tanks were the most powerful German tanks to be widely used
in advance! He sent a message three and a half hours before the first landings,
in Normandy (around 126 and 655 respectively). Their powerful guns and
which the Allies had calculated would not be enough time for the Germans to alert
thick armour made them superior to most Allied tanks. Wartime research
their troops. In fact, the Germans were not listening at the right time!
found that on average it took 2.55 shots to destroy a Tiger, but 1.63 to knock out a Sherman (the most numerous Allied tank). In fact the majority of German tanks were equivalent to or little better than Allied tanks, and the close-range fighting in Normandy meant that advantages at long range were not an issue: ambushing the opponent from a camouflaged position was often the deciding factor. A powerful tank was of no use if it
sapping the German units’ strength. Troops and supplies being moved by rail
had run out of fuel or ammunition (due to the Allies interrupting German
were delayed en route, and with limited rail capacity the Germans effectively
supplies), or was immobilised due to breakdowns (a frequent problem with
had to choose between increasing the number of troops in Normandy and
the most formidable German tanks). Allied manufacturing capabilities were
supplying those who were already there. During this wearing-down process
such that new tanks could be supplied relatively easily, unlike the Germans.
Allied units were also suffering heavy casualties, of course.
However, these considerations were of course no comfort to an Allied soldier
The rate at which Allied troops were being landed was already two days
facing such weapons.
behind schedule when a major storm occurred from 19 to 22 June. The
In the infantry’s anti-tank weapons there was a similar imbalance, with the
damage caused by the storm contributed to a delay of around one week in
German Panzerfaust being superior to the American bazooka and the British
the Allies’ overall plan for the landings. Cherbourg was captured on 27 June,
PIAT.The German machine guns had a much higher rate of fire (1,200 rounds
but due to damage caused by the Germans its port would not operate at full
per minute, compared to 500 or so for Allied weapons). Other infamous
capacity until September.
German
On 26 June Montgomery launched Operation Epsom in an attempt
weapons
were
the
88mm
anti-tank/anti-aircraft gun, and
the
Nebelwerfer multiple-barrelled mortar. Allied weaknesses in other areas were
to outflank Caen from the west. Three days later the British reached Hill
to some extent balanced by the superiority of Allied air power and artillery.
112, a position that had a commanding view over the surrounding area. A
Much has been written about the relative effectiveness of German and
series of fierce battles were fought over this location, ending on 23 July. The
Allied fighting men. The ability of German troops to continue fighting
outflanking manoeuvre of Epsom did not succeed overall, but the Germans
despite being outnumbered, or being formed into makeshift units, was
were forced to commit their newly arrived tank force, comprising two SS
certainly impressive. Many of the better-quality German units contained men
panzer divisions, into this fight rather than moving it against the Americans
with very recent experience of combat on the Eastern Front. In comparison,
further west. At the end of the subsequent German counter-attack both sides
most Allied units arrived in Normandy with considerable training, but
had suffered serious losses.
little or no combat experience. Too often vital tactics such as co-operation
By the end ofjune 875,000 Allied troops had disembarked in Normandy,
between tanks and infantry had not been sufficiently rehearsed by Allied troops in training.
but the British had suffered 24,698 casualties, and the Americans 37,034. The Germans now had 400,000 troops in the region. Thanks to the Allied
The Anglo-Canadians launched Operation Charnwood on 8 July in a
deception plans, another 250,000 enemy soldiers were still awaiting another
renewed attempt to capture Caen. Some 460 heavy bomber aircraft attacked
Allied landing in the Pas de Calais. The German forces defending Caen
the northern part of the city overnight, in advance of the ground troops.This
and facing the Anglo-Canadians (Panzer Group West) had seven armoured
caused heavy casualties amongst French civilians, and led to thousands taking
divisions, four infantry divisions and one Luftwaffe division. Seventh Army,
refuge in nearby stone quarries and in the Abbaye aux Hommes (the church
104
On 14 June 1944 the Free French leader, General Charles de Gaulle, landed in France and established a government at Bayeux. As can be seen here, he received a joyous welcome from the local people. (© Trustees of the Royal Marines Museum)
105
Y
N
P H O
GRAPH
These British infantrymen carry picks and shovels for digging foxholes. A hole in the ground was the best form of protection against bombs, shells and bullets. At the centre and right are a PIAT anti-tank weapon and a Bren light machine gun, respectively, which provided vital firepower for the infantry.
Yet Goodwood did have the effect of drawing German tank units towards
in the centre of the city). British troops reached the Orne Valley south-west of Caen, which would be the scene of further hard fighting in coming weeks.
the east of the Allied beachhead, and away from the next American offensive.
The Americans would soon launch a major offensive to advance from
Getting into position to launch this offensive had taken the Americans two
the area of St Lo and break through the bocage into more open terrain
weeks and many casualties. The Germans facing them had also suffered
(Operation Cobra). Prior to that attack, the Anglo-Canadian forces would
terribly.The Panzer Lehr division, which had started the Battle of Normandy
make an attack to hold German tank units away from the Americans. This
with about 15,000 troops and 237 first-rate tanks and assault guns, was now
was Operation Goodwood, beginning on 18 July. Three British armoured
at a strength of 3,400 men and forty tanks.
divisions with 750 tanks had been gathered in reserve, and were launched to
The average daily casualty rate of the Allied ground forces in Normandy
the east of Caen. The attack began with massed heavy bomber aircraft and
actually exceeded that amongst British troops during the bloody Battle of
the fire of 750 guns, to blast a way through the German lines. Despite rapid
Passchendaele in the First World War. As British casualties in Normandy
initial advances, the British forces did not break through the entire German
mounted, the number of available replacements (and particularly infantrymen)
defensive system.
who could take the place of those lost was decreasing. As early as the end of
106
FROM
THE
BATTLE
OF
NORMANDY
TO
E - D A Y
June it was not uncommon for an infantry battalion to have to merge two
The first days of Operation Cobra saw heavy casualties on both sides,
of its companies (each with a theoretical complement of 127) because their
but the Germans had fewer tanks in reserve than were faced by the British
actual strength had fallen so low. The shortages of infantry directly affected
and Canadians. The overall German logistical system was now critically
the planning for Operation Goodwood, in which heavy bombers — not
weakened, and this assisted the American advance. German supplies reached
infantry — were used to make a hole in the German lines, which could then
Normandy by two key railway routes, which at intervals were cut by Allied
be exploited by British tanks.
air raids.The main rail route to the German 7th Army (facing the Americans
After Goodwood the key German forces, the panzer divisions, were
in the western side of the beachhead) was cut on 15 July. On 26 July, the day
distributed thus: seven facing the British (with 645 out of 835 tanks), and
after Operation Cobra began, German tanks were running out of fuel, and
only two facing the Americans.The First US Army’s Operation Cobra began
German anti-tank guns were running out of ammunition.
on 25 July, again with 1,500 heavy bombers attacking German positions in advance of the ground troops.
By 30 July the US forces had reached Avranches, at the base of the Cotentin Peninsula, and in front of them there was little co-ordinated German resistance. They began to advance rapidly into Brittany in the west, the Loire Valley to the south, and towards Paris in the east. On 1 August command of all American forces was placed under the newly created US 12th Army Group (under Lieutenant General Omar Bradley), while Lieutenant General George Patton was given command of the new US Third Army. Urged on by their dynamic commander, Patton’s forces advanced at speeds unheard of over the previous two months. At around the same time as the American breakout, British Second Army launched Operation Bluecoat, which was designed to continue holding the German panzer divisions on their front. The German position in Normandy was fatally weakened, and the most logical choice would have been a retreat to the River Seine, which they could have used as a natural obstacle to the Allied advance. Instead, Hitler ordered a counter-attack at the town of Mortain on the evening of 6 August, using about 185 tanks that had been carefully gathered together. By striking across the line of the American advance, Hitler hoped to isolate Patton’s forces. After some initial success this offensive simply drove the attackers deeper inside a rapidly closing Allied encirclement. On the night of 7 August a Canadian and Polish attack — Operation Totalize — aimed to cut off the remaining German forces from the north by advancing to Falaise. American forces, including a French armoured division, reached Avranches on the southern side of the encirclement. The shattered remnants of twenty-five German divisions risked being cut off in a ‘pocket’ that was being closed by the Anglo-Canadian forces at one edge, and the Americans at the other.The only way out was through a rapidly
Well-camouflaged German troops somewhere in Normandy. The Germans were skilled in defence, and were aided by the difficult Normandy terrain. Areas
closing space near the town of Falaise, which gave its name to this so-called ‘Falaise Gap’. The situation was made even more terrible for the Germans
known as the bocage proved particularly difficult for the Allies to fight through.
by the constant attacks by Allied aircraft. Canadian and Polish units sought
Small fields bounded by thick hedges on top of earth banks turned each
to plug the gap, and were cut off for several days, but continued to resist and
hedgerow into a small fortification.
prevent or delay more enemy troops escaping.
D-DAY:
IN
PHOTOGRAPHS
By 22 August it was over. Although 20,000 or more German soldiers had
the Allied armies supplied. A debate ensued among the Allied commanders
managed to escape from the pocket, they did so without most of their heavy
as to whether the advance should continue on a broad or narrow front (and
weapons and equipment.They left behind 10,000 dead and 50,000 prisoners.
if the latter, which forces should lead it). Montgomery devised a new plan to re-launch the offensive: Operation
The mass of dead bodies in the ‘pocket’ could be smelt from aircraft flying
Market Garden. Rather than a steady advance on a broad front, the plan
overhead. The first Allied troops reached the Seine on 19 August. Six days later French
was for a sudden strike through the Netherlands to Arnhem. The plan used
troops entered Paris to liberate their country’s capital. The Allied landings in
three airborne divisions to capture key bridges, with ground troops linking
the south of France on 15 August had worsened an already critical situation
them in succession. The final bridge proved to be, in the words of the British
for the Germans. By the end of August 1944 just over 2 million Allied troops
airborne commander,‘a bridge too far’, and the British 1st Airborne Division
and 438,471 vehicles had landed in Normandy.
suffered heavy losses.
Eisenhower took over direct command of all Allied ground forces from
The
stalemate
resumed, resulting from
the limitations
of the
over¬
Montgomery on 1 September.The frontline moved rapidly through Belgium
extended Allied supply chain and also the continued German resistance.
and into Holland. The speed of the advance began to make it difficult to keep
On 16 December American forces in the Ardennes area of Belgium were
An American ‘Long Tom’ 155mm gun with its crew. The effectiveness and size of the Allied artillery forces was such that it was sometimes said - only partly in jest - that the main purpose of the rest of the army was to move the artillery observers forward to the next hilltop, so that they always had a clear view of the enemy.
108
FROM
THE
BATTLE
OF
NO
unexpectedly hit by a huge German attack in what became known as the
Gradually the soldiers, sailors and airmen — and women — returned to
Battle of the Bulge. A large German force had been assembled in secret, and
civilian life, forever changed by the experience of war. In the later years
initially made major advances, aided by poor weather that grounded Allied
many would once again seek out the companionship of fellow veterans, and
aircraft. Vital road junctions at StVith and Bastogne were defended by US
attempt to recreate the comradeship that they had known decades ago, in
troops. As the weather improved, and German fuel supplies diminished, the
wartime.
German attack was contained. Although it came as a shock to the Allies, the attack had also critically weakened the German army. As the western Allies renewed their offensive in the new year, so too did the Soviets, launching a major attack on 12 January 1945. In a few weeks the Soviet armies of 2.2 million men advanced 280 miles. Although eventual defeat seemed inevitable, the Germans still fought strongly. 21st Army Group saw bitter fighting in the Reichswald Forest during February and early March. At Remagen on 7 March the first Allied troops crossed the River Rhine, a natural obstacle guarding Germany from the west. By the end of the month the Allies had footholds across the Rhine along a 200-mile front. On 16 April the final Soviet attack on Berlin began, and towards the end of the month their troops were in the heart of the city. Hitler committed suicide on 30 April. German forces surrendered shortly afterwards, and combat ceased on 8 May 1945, which was designatedVE-Day (Victory in Europe Day). There were over 209,000 Allied casualties during the Battle of Normandy, including nearly 37,000 dead amongst the ground forces and a further 16,714 deaths amongst the Allied air forces. Roughly 200,000 German troops were killed or wounded, and some 200,000 became prisoners of war. Over 15,000 French civilians were killed, mainly as a result of Allied bombing. Thousands more fled their homes to escape the fighting. In the fighting from D-Day into Germany the western Allies had lost some 750,000 casualties, over two thirds of which were Americans. Those killed included nearly 110,000 Americans and 41,000 British and Canadians. The full number of those killed in the whole of the Second World War will never be known exactly, but has been estimated as over 46 million people. As the Allied troops advanced — both from the west and the east — they liberated the Nazi death camps, revealing the full extent and horror of the Holocaust. The end of the war did not mean the end of the suffering for millions of people across the world: Holocaust survivors, refugees, those still
On 13 June at Villers-Bocage, as they tried to exploit a gap in the German
held as prisoners of war, all those who had lost loved ones, not to mention
lines, British 22nd Armoured Brigade suffered heavy losses to a small force of
the psychologically traumatised soldiers and the ravaged civilians in the wake
German Tiger tanks. The town was flattened by RAF bombers on 30 June, as
of the advance, both east and west.
seen here, during an attempt to halt a German tank attack.
109
1
Men of the US 90th Infantry Division pause at Baudienville in the Cotentin Peninsula, probably on 7 June. This division suffered heavy casualties in the campaign to seal off the peninsula and prevent the Germans from being able to reinforce the important port of Cherbourg to the north. (US Navy photograph)
2
US soldiers search German prisoners of war after the capture of the former arsenal at Cherbourg. Once the Americans had captured the city on 29 June they found that the Germans had destroyed or booby-trapped its port facilities. This delayed the use of the port by Allied shipping.
3
Rockets fired from a Typhoon aircraft against enemy positions on Carpiquet Airfield, to the west of Caen. The airfield was bitterly fought for by the Canadians during the Allied advance on Caen. Typhoons carrying rockets like these were a major weapon against German tanks.
110
FROM
THE
Penicillin In
previous
wars
many
wounded soldiers died
not
directly from their wounds but as a result of later infections. Penicillin was discovered in 1928, but was not thoroughly investigated as a means of infection control until
1939.
During the Second World War methods were developed for mass-producing the quantities of penicillin required by the armed
forces,
and
huge
supplies of it were stockpiled for treating wounded troops from D-Day.
Royal Marines of No.45 Commando in action by the side of a Normandy road, June 1944. The man in the centre has a Bren light machine gun, typically used to provide supporting fire while other members of the unit attacked the enemy. (© Trustees of the Royal Marines Museum)
111
THE END OF THE BATTLE OF NORMANDY
CHERBOURG
25 MILES
COTENTIN PENINSULA
CARENTAN
BAYEUX
FIRST CANADIAN ARMY
SECOND BRITISH ARMY
FIRST US ARMY '
FALAISE
RETREATING GERMAN FORCES AVRANCHES
MORTAIN
THIRD US ARMY
1
This map shows in simplified form the final Allied offensives in Normandy, in the west the US forces attacked south from near St Lo (Operation Cobra), breaking through to the east and west. The British, American and Canadian armies then surrounded the remaining German forces, despite a German counter-attack at Mortain, and many German troops were killed or captured in the Falaise pocket.
2
British and Canadian troops are met by French civic and resistance leaders as Caen is liberated, 9 July 1944. The buildings behind them indicate the damage sustained by the city during the heavy fighting.
3
British tanks of 27th Armoured Brigade and infantry of 3rd Division advance to the east of Caen on 18 July, on the first day of Operation Goodwood. This division protected the eastern flank of this major British tank attack.
4
Men of 3rd Canadian Division rest at Caen’s train station after the liberation of the city. They are eating and drinking from their standard issue mess tins and mugs. (Conseil Regional de Basse-Normandie / National Archives Canada)
112
1
The cover of the Luftwaffe’s magazine in Western Europe from June 1944 depicts German reinforcements heading for Normandy. On the left is an 88mm anti-aircraft gun which was also greatly feared by Allied troops for its effectiveness as an anti-tank or anti-personnel weapon.
2
British tanks move forward during Operation Goodwood (18-21 July), to the east of the River Orne. This major attack involved 750 tanks from three British armoured divisions: Guards, 7th and 11th. It did not achieve its full territorial objectives but did draw German reserves away from Operation Cobra.
3
Members of 1 st Polish Armoured Division hold a church service on board LST 425 while crossing the English Channel to go to Normandy. The division’s troops played a key role in preventing German forces escaping encirclement in the Falaise pocket on 19-21 August 1944. Photograph taken by Lieutenant Trevor Wilson RNVR. (Courtesy of Martin Wilson)
4
This vertical aerial photograph, taken at night during the Battle of Normandy, illustrates some of the German army's difficulties. Deadly Allied air attacks in the daytime made the night the safest time to move troops. These German vehicles (mostly horse-drawn, which reflects the Germans’ limited fuel supply) are moving past a heavily shelled crossroads.
M8 Greyhound armoured cars and other vehicles of US 4th Armored Division pass through Le Repas, about twelve miles north of Avranches on 31 July 1944. The division was one of General George Patton’s key units, and soon after this made rapid advances into Brittany. (Conseil Regional de Basse-Normandie / US National Archives)
Hitler’s jet aircraft Nazi leader Adolf Hitler committed huge resources to so-called
entire Normandy beachhead. Had it been available before
‘wonder weapons’, several of which might have affected D-Day
D-Day the Germans might have discovered where in the UK
had they been developed in time. These included two jet aircraft
Allied troops were assembling. Hitler wanted the Messerschmitt
that could have used their high speeds to evade the more
Me 262 jet fighter (maximum speed 540mph) to be capable of
numerous Allied fighters. The Arado Ar 234 had a top speed
bombing Allied invasion forces, but it was not fully operational
of around 460mph, and in its first operational photographic
until 1945.
reconnaissance flight on 2 August 1944 it photographed the
114
1
US troops at St Malo, reached in mid-August 1944 as the Americans began to advance into Brittany. The city was left in ruins after its liberation from German occupation.
2
Five hours before the landings in the south of France began on 15 August, US sailors contemplate the likely outcome. They include members of a demolition unit that would prepare the way for following troops. The landings added to the Germans’ critical situation in France. (US Navy photograph)
3
A Staghound armoured car of the Canadian 18th Armoured Car Regiment passes a knocked-out King Tiger tank. This was the most powerful German tank in Normandy, but fortunately for the Allies very few were used there. The location is near Vimoutiers, beyond the Falaise Gap, on 22 August 1944. (Conseil Regional de Basse-Normandie / National Archives Canada)
115
1 A Panther tank that has met its end (the crew have apparently escaped through the open hatches). The Panther was an effective German tank, easily a match for most Allied tanks, and 655 were used in Normandy. 2 Wrecked German vehicles lie in heaps near
Falaise, thrown about by Allied shelling or air attacks, which caused terrible destruction to the retreating German forces. 3 This vertical
aerial photograph, taken on
26 August, shows queues of German vehicles waiting to cross the River Seine on a ferry during the retreat from the Falaise pocket. After this photograph was taken the area was swiftly bombed by the Allies.
116
FROM
1
THE
BATTLE
OF
NORMANDY
French soldiers, and members of the Resistance,
receive the surrender of German troops during the liberation of Paris. French troops were specially tasked with liberating their capital city, which took place on 25 August. 2 On 1 September 1944 Bernard Montgomery crossed
the River Seine. On the same day he was promoted to the rank of field marshal. Eisenhower took over the overall command of the Allied ground forces, while Montgomery still commanded 21st Army Group, now comprising British Second Army and Canadian First Army. 3 A
photograph taken from the air showing the
British airborne landings in progress near Arnhem on 17 September 1944. Dakota aircraft fly overhead, dropping troops. Hundreds of parachutists and a small number of gliders can be seen.
117
TO
VE-DAY
G R A'P H S
The Polish troops in Normandy Soldiers from many nations fought as part of the Allied armies in Normandy, and the case of the Poles illustrates the hardships that they had often gone through even before D-Day. After the German defeat of Poland in 1939 tens of thousands of Poles escaped to Allied countries, many taking part in the fighting in 1940. Following the fall of France, 24,000 of these men reached the UK, and from these exiles and also from Poles who had emigrated before the war, was constructed the 1st Polish Armoured Division, which fought in Normandy towards the end of the battle. After the war, many chose not to return to Soviet-dominated Poland.
2
A house seen by British soldier Edwin Crowe in the Goch area of Germany during the last months of the war. The German graffiti indicates a continued spirit of German resistance: it translates as ‘stick it out, fight, win’ and ‘One people, one empire, one Fuhrer (leader)’.
3
1 British aircraft fly overhead on their way to drop airborne troops during 21 st
A half-built V-2 rocket in the underground V-weapons factory at Nordhausen, Germany, seen after it was captured by Allied forces. The factory labourers
Army Group's crossing of the River Rhine on 24 March 1945 (Operation
were all from the nearby Dora concentration camp, and conditions there
Plunder). The first Allied troops reached the Rhine on 7 March, and by the
were unimaginably harsh. As the Allies advanced, their troops liberated the
end of the month they were across and advancing on a wide front.
concentration camps and saw first-hand evidence of the Holocaust.
FROM
1
THE
BATTLE
O F
NORMANDY
The Reichstag (parliament building) in Berlin just after the end of the war, photographed by Ken Pitt, a British soldier. Berlin was captured by the Soviets, but its control was subsequently divided up between USA, Britain, France and the Soviet Union.
2
A vehicle pass issued to Arthur Wichall by the Soviets when he served as a driver for the British contingent at the Potsdam Conference in July 1945. The conference was held by the Allies to discuss the borders of post-war Europe. The seeds of the Cold War were already sown.
3
A wooden cross marks the grave of Private William Bell of 1st Hampshires, who was killed on D-Day. Until August 1944 his family were only told that he was ‘missing’. The end of the Second World War did not mean an end to the pain and suffering that war had brought to millions of people across the world.
119
TO
VE-DAY
D-DAY:
P
IN
OTOGRAPHS Fellowship); Mr C.J. Holness; Lieutenant Commander G.B. Honour; Mrs J.
ABOUT THE PHOTOGRAPHS
Hurston; Mr D.T. Huxtable; Ms Seran Kubisa; Mr E.G.R. Lea; Mr G.E. Laughton; Mr Rowan le Bentall; Mrs M. Lyons; Mr David Maber; Mr Ron Manning;
The majority of the photographs and other images used in this book are from the collections of the D-Day Museum, which is part of Portsmouth Museums & Records Service and Portsmouth City Council. The D-Day Museum is the UK’s only museum that has the sole aim of telling the story of the Normandy Landings. For enquiries about these photographs, or if you would like to donate material to the museum (or let us copy it), please contact:
Mr Frank Martin; Mr R.C. Martin; Mr S. Mincher; Mr Mitchell; Mr W.M. Morgan; Musee du Debarquement, Arromanches; Mrs Audrey Nabarro; Mrs L.E. Ormston; M. Patrick Peccatte & M. Michel Le Querrec (www.flickr.com/ photos/photosnormandie); Mr Ken Pitt, Mr K.W. Peeling; Mr Oliver H. Perks; Mr L.A.C. Pratt; Lieutenant Colonel R.H.C. Probert; Mrs J. Quicke; Mr Alan Ritchie; Mr Robert Rule; Royal Naval Museum, Portsmouth; Royal Marines Museum, Portsmouth; Mrs Gabrielle Russwurm; Mr C.W. Salter; Dr J. Nuttall Smith; Mr
Military History Officer
C.J. Stares; Mr Mark Stedman; Mr R.F. Stubbs; Tangmere Aviation Museum; Mrs
City Museum & Records Office Museum Road
JoyTimbrell (Lieutenant Phillip Winkley photos); Mrs Angela Tilley (Commander Tel. 023 9282 7261
Portsmouth, POl 2LJ
www.ddaymuseum.co.uk
United Kingdom
Eric Middleton photos); The News, Portsmouth; Mr Warren Tute; Mr Martin Waarvick; Mrs C. Ward; Mr Brian Warner; Mr Malcolm Waterman; Mrs D. White; Mr Martin Wilson (Lieutenant Trevor Wilson photos); Miss B. Yates.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY
The author would like to thank the following: my wife Bryony for her support during the writing of this book; Portsmouth City Council, my employer, for letting me base the book on the collections of the D-Day Museum and Portsmouth Museums
& Records Service; the many Normandy veterans
(particularly members of the Portsmouth Branch of the Normandy Veterans Association) who have talked to me about their experiences and given other assistance; Viscount Montgomery for his Foreword; Alan Wakefield for his comments on the drafts; and the many other people, too numerous to name individually, who have assisted me during the writing of this book.
Books that were particularly useful in the writing of this volume include: Georges Bernarge, Gold Juno Sword (Editions Heimdal, 2003) Stephen Brooks and Eve Eckstein, Operation Overlord. The History of D-Day and the Overlord Embroidery (Ashford, 1989) John Buckley (ed.), The Normandy Campaign 1944. Sixty years on (Routledge, 2006) David Chandler and James Lawton Collins (eds.), The D-Day Encyclopaedia (Simon & Schuster, 1994) Ian Daglish, Operation Epsom: Over the Battlefield (Pen & Sword, 2007)
Since the D-Day Museum opened in 1984 several thousand members of the public have given D-Day-related material to the museum’s collections. It has only been possible to use a proportion of these items in this book, but the museum is grateful to everyone who has donated such material. Without their generosity, this book would not have been possible.
L.F. Ellis, Victory in the West. Volume LThe Battle of Normandy (HMSO, 1962) Jonathan Gawne, Spearheading D-Day: American Special Units in Normandy (Histoire & Collecions, 2001) Max Hastings, Overlord: D-Day and the Battle of Normandy 1944 (Michael Joseph, 1984)
Copyright to some of these photographs belongs to other organisations or individuals, and the author is grateful to have received permission for their use.
John Man, The Penguin Atlas of D-Day and the Normandy Campaign (Penguin, 1994) No given author, Operation Overlord. From its Planning to the Liberation of Paris
Images used in the book were kindly provided by the following:
(Salamander, 1999)
MrJ. Roy Arden (Mr Len Williams photos); Mr J.H. Barfod; Mr Robin Beckett; Mr M.H. Bibby; Mr David Bright; Mr W.E. Brown; Mr G.P. Cashmore; the Reverend G.W.H. Champness; Conseil Regional
de Basse-Normandie
(US
National
Archives & National Archives Canada photos, www.archivesnormandie39-45. org); Mr R. Cowey; Canon F.W (Mike) Crooks; Mrs Eva Crowe (Mr Edwin
Winston Ramsey (ed.), D-Day Then and Now (two volumes), (Battle of Britain Prints International, 1995) S.W. Roskill, The War at Sea 1939-1945, Volume 3:The Offensive, Part II: 1st June 1944-14th August 1945 (HMSO, 1961) David Stafford, Ten Days to D-Day (Little, Brown, 2003)
Crowe photos); Commander Rupert Curtis; Mr K. Edmonds Gately; Mr Anthony
Warren Tute, D-Day (Sidgwick & Jackson, 1974)
R. Elliot; Mr R.A. Elliott; Mr John Ellis (photos from Mr John Ellis, Mr Leslie
Various authors, the Battlefeld Europe series of battlefield guidebooks (Pen &
Fowler and Mr Heather); Mr A.R. Freemantle; Mrs B. Gaudry; Air Commodore Andrew Geddes; Mr G.J. George; Lieutenant Commander Fred Gerretson (USN Combat Photo Unit 8 photographs); Mr Ron Grant; Mrs J.E. Hamilton; Mr Ian Hammerton; Mr Robert Flare; Mr Philip M. Hedley-Prole; Professor Andre Heintz; Mr R.V. Hill; Major & Mrs D. Holman (D-Day & Normandy
Sword, 1999-2002) Various authors, the Battle Zone Normandy series of battlefield guidebooks (Sutton, 2004) Niklas Zetterling, Normandy 1944: German Military Effectiveness, Combat Power and Organizational Effectiveness (J.J. Fedorowicz, 2000)
T
HE Allied landings in France on 6 June 1944 were a turning point in world history. This book is a compilation
4*
of 200 images relating to all aspects of D-Day and the Normandy landings, beginning with
NEW APPLEBY
•the years of planning and preparations, all conducted in great secrecy. Next the focus is on the naval and air force operations, the airborne landings, and the British, American and Canadian forces who came ashore on 6 June. The book also covers the months of hard fighting during the Battle of Normandy, and through to the end of the war. Using the extensive archives of the Portsmouth D-Day Museum, this is a moving and unique record of a momentous time.
ANDREW WHITMARSH is military history officer for Portsmouth Museums & Records Service, a role which includes the curatorship of the D-Day Museum and Overlord Embroidery. The D-Day Museum opened in 1984 and is the United Kingdom’s only museum with the sole purpose of telling the story of D-Day. He has been its curator since 2001. He has written a variety of popular and academic articles on military history, as well as D-Day in Photographs and Portsmouth at War for The History Press.
Portsmouth CITY COUNCIL D-DAY MUSEUM, PORTSMOUTH PORTSMOUTH MUSEUMS & RECORDS SERVICE